this book is for the beginners of 3d world
by: M. Movsisyan
MAni is a very funny and smart capybara, with glasses and office ourfit, teaching astrophysics to people
by: A. Tian
AAni is a very smart, but anxious lynx, who is very tired of daily routine and wants to explore something new
by: A. Tian
ADepressive but very beautiful black cat named Ani, is a model and writer at the same time.
by: A. Tian
ACute rabbit named Ani is a k-pop idol and programmer at the same time.
by: A. Tian
AIn a village perched between towering mountains, a mysterious clocktower has kept perfect time for centuries despite no one ever seeing it wound. When 16-year-old Elara accidentally discovers a hidden door at its base during the annual Timekeeping Festival, she finds herself apprenticed to the ancient Timekeeper—a keeper of temporal magic who maintains the delicate balance between past, present, and future. As Elara learns to manipulate small pockets of time, she uncovers a plot by a bitter former apprentice to stop time completely, which would freeze the world in a single eternal moment. With the clocktower's mechanisms beginning to fail and time starting to fracture throughout the village—causing some moments to repeat endlessly while others accelerate unpredictably—Elara must master her newfound abilities and journey through chambers of the tower that exist in different eras. Guided by a mechanical fox that can leap between timestreams and hindered by temporal anomalies of her own creation, Elara races to repair the damage before the final midnight bell strikes and time itself unravels forever.
by: M. Movsisyan
MAs settlements expand and technology reshapes human connection to land, the planet's last truly nomadic peoples face unprecedented challenges to their ancient ways of life. 'The Last Nomads' follows Mongolian herders navigating harsh winters on dwindling grasslands, Amazonian hunter-gatherers contending with deforestation, and Saharan camel caravans maintaining trade routes amid political instability and climate change. Through intimate portraits and firsthand accounts, this narrative explores how these communities are adapting traditional knowledge to contemporary pressures while fighting for cultural survival and land rights. The book examines how nomadic perspectives offer vital insights on sustainable resource management, social resilience, and living meaningfully with minimal material possessions. As governments push for settlement and global markets transform local economies, 'The Last Nomads' reveals what modern societies might learn from these endangered ways of life—and what wisdom might be lost forever if these traditions disappear within our lifetime.
by: M. Movsisyan
MFrom the smoky basement clubs of 1920s Montmartre to modern-day jam sessions along the Seine, 'The Midnight Orchestra' chronicles how Paris became an unexpected sanctuary and creative crucible for jazz. This vibrant history traces how African American musicians like Sidney Bechet and Josephine Baker found artistic freedom and respect in France that America denied them, how Django Reinhardt synthesized American innovation with European tradition to create a sound uniquely his own, and how the Nazi occupation drove the art form underground only for it to emerge as a symbol of liberation. Through wars, cultural shifts, and massive social change, the book reveals how this distinctly American art form found a second home in the City of Light, creating a rich cross-cultural legacy that continues to evolve. Based on rare recordings, personal letters, and interviews with surviving musicians, 'The Midnight Orchestra' captures the passion, politics, and personalities that created a musical conversation across continents.
by: M. Movsisyan
MFrom prehistoric cave paintings to Roman graffiti to today's global urban art movement, 'Painted Cities' traces how public spaces have always served as canvases for human expression and resistance. This vivid chronicle follows street art's evolution from criminalized vandalism to museum-worthy cultural phenomenon, exploring how artists like Banksy, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and countless anonymous creators transformed city walls into powerful vehicles for social commentary. The book examines how authoritarian regimes have sought to control public imagery, how marginalized communities have reclaimed visual representation through guerrilla art, and how digital technology is redefining what constitutes a 'street' in street art. Through interviews with legendary artists, law enforcement officials, art historians, and community activists, 'Painted Cities' reveals how the most democratic art form in human history continues to challenge power structures and reshape our visual landscape, one wall at a time.
by: M. Movsisyan
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